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water wars: thirsty camals rampage

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donsu Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-14-07 12:04 PM
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water wars: thirsty camals rampage

http://hisz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/woalert_read.php?id=10334&cat=dis&lang=eng


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Wild camels in drought-stricken Australia are in plague proportions, damaging the environment and property as they compete with native animals for food and water. Camels "mad with thirst" recently rampaged through the Western Desert Aboriginal community of Warakurna, damaging toilets, faucets and air conditioners to find water. "There were a couple of hundred — they get big mobs up here," the operator of the Warakurna Roadhouse said on Wednesday. "They did a lot of damage searching for water, trampling air conditioning hoses, taps and pipes," she said from the remote roadhouse, about 500 miles west of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory. Australia has the world's largest wild camel population.

Camels were first brought to the country in the 18th century to help explorers venture into the dry interior. "An estimated one million feral camels, whose numbers double every eight years, compete with native animals and livestock, threaten native plants, wreck fences, bores and tanks, and invade Aboriginal sites," said Glenn Edwards, from the Desert Knowledge Cooperative Research Center. The center, established to pursue economic projects for outback Aborigines, said a national feral camel management plan was urgently needed. The environmental impact of feral camels was most prominent in Australia's biggest state of Western Australia, where half the nation's feral camels are thought to roam. Australia's worst drought in 100 years is to blame for the recent rampage by camels, but increasing numbers of wild camels has caused serious environmental, economic and cultural damage right across the outback for years, said Edwards, who works for Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife service. A national camel management plan should see a combination of methods to reduce camel numbers, from culling to live exports, the center said.

"Some culling will be unavoidable," Edwards said in a statement ahead of a camel management meeting in Perth on Thursday. "In unpopulated areas, for example in the Simpson Desert, culling will be the only option." Most camels are currently exported live to Southeast Asia where they are slaughtered. The Centralian Advocate newspaper in Alice Springs this month reported thousands of camels were dying of thirst at Docker River some 370 miles west of Alice Springs, but local Aborigines refuse to cull the thirsty animals. "The camels do a lot of damage to the land, and when there's no water, they come into the community and cause damage," Docker River community adviser Chris Moon told the newspaper. The camel problem was so bad at the even more remote Warakurna, a community of 140 people, that hunters had been hired to kill 100 camels a week, said the newspaper. Warakurna will freeze the meat and transport it to Perth in Western Australia as pet meat, said the newspaper.

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water wars
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TwilightGardener Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-14-07 12:06 PM
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1. Poor camels! :(
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kestrel91316 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-14-07 12:10 PM
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2. Another imported species wreaking havoc. We humans just can't
seem to resist creating unresolvable messes wherever we go.......

The camels really don't belong in Oz AT ALL.
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A HERETIC I AM Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-14-07 12:15 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Thank you Kestral. I was trying to find a polite way of saying the same thing.
I don't want to see any animals suffer, but it would not be an entirely bad thing for the outback if this drought decimated the feral camel population.
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TygrBright Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-15-07 09:40 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. Nor do many of the species there now, unfortunately...
Australia was perhaps the most unique, delicately-balanced, and fragile continental ecosystem on earth (Antarctica maybe excepted,) and unfortunately, Westernized humanity "discovered" it long before we had any real understanding of jus how complex and delicate such balances are. The attitude of "Oh, wow, cool... a lot of land with not a lot of people on it. We should take this over and DO something with it! Especially something that will make us rich!" was a ruinous legacy for Western "civilization" to leave the world.

sadly,
Bright
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